Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
26656
Building Number
28  
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
24/05/2002  
Date of Amendment
24/05/2002  
Name of Property
,28,The Parade,Tredegarville,Cardiff,,CF24 3AB  
Address
28 The Parade  

Location


Unitary Authority
Cardiff  
Community
Plasnewydd  
Town
Cardiff  
Locality
Tredegarville  
Easting
318990  
Northing
176902  
Street Side
N  
Location
Immediately E of Coleg Glan Hafren. Set back from the street behind dwarf walls with square piers to front and side entrances. The entrance is reached up stone steps.  

Description


Broad Class
Domestic  
Period
 

History
Built in the third quarter of the C19, probably by W.G. Habershon, architect to the Tredegar Estate, for J.E. Billups, a local railway contractor. The monograms JEB and SCB are on the building. The building became part of the adjacent Cardiff Intermediate School for Girls of 1897-1900 (now Coleg Glan Hafren), being attached to its assembly hall by means of a single-story link to the rear of the house. It has subsequently become a separate English language college.  

Exterior
Jacobean style 3-bay villa of 2 storeys and attic. The front is of ashlar with rusticated quoins and dressings in lighter stone, comprising a narrow central entrance bay with cupola flanked by wide and slightly projecting outer bays under shaped gables. The gables project on moulded kneelers which have obelisk pinnacles. The roof is slate. On the R side are 2 stone stacks, which have 3 (originally 4) tall freestone shafts with cusped lozenge panels in relief to the front, and 5 similar shafts to the rear stack. A single stone stack on the L side has 4 similar tall shafts. The entrance portico has paired Tuscan columns on high panelled bases and Doric entablature, while behind it are Tuscan pilasters framing the round-headed doorway with keystone. The door and overlight are replaced in the original opening. Above the portico is a narrow replaced window with original transom and strapwork cresting over a deep moulded cornice. The outer bays have 2-storey canted bays incorporating 2-light mullioned and transomed windows and with an open balustrade, and plain basement sash windows. The attic has 2-light windows with strapwork cresting over deep cornices. In the gables are short sill and cornice bands to shields with relief monograms 'LCB' to the L and 'SCB' to the R, also with strapwork cresting. The apex has ball and obelisk finials. The central polygonal cupola has an ogee domical lead roof and pinnacle with weathervane. Each facet has a 2-light window with plain arched lights. The side and rear walls are snecked rock-faced Pennant sandstone, The R side has a single sash window upper centre and broad freestone band between storeys. The L side wall is similar, but has added escape stairs linked with the adjacent Coleg Glan Hafren. The 3-bay rear elevation has shaped gables with eaves and apex finials similar to the front. In the lower storey the 3-light mullioned and transomed windows have a central half-glazed door opening on to a terrace, which has a basement beneath, also with 3-light mullioned windows. The upper storey has smaller 3-light mullioned and transomed in the outer bays, and 2-light attic windows below narrow vents. The central doorway has a tooled stone surround and is surmounted by strapwork cresting. A half-glazed panelled door has an overlight and a half-glazed panel to its R. Above the doorway is a 2-light stair window with strapwork cresting.  

Interior
An entrance lobby has half-glazed panel doors incorporating etched glass panels, with similar glazed side and overlights (replaced glass on R side). The central stair hall has a fine Jacobean full-height open-well stair, which is the principal interior feature. It has open strapwork balusters. At the bottom is a square newel with detached shafts and surmounted by a brass lamp holder. In the upper storeys the newels are plainer, with blind strapwork. The soffit has wood panelling. The stairs to the attic is plainer still, with fielded-panel balustrade. From the stair hall is a depressed plastered arch leading to the rooms on the L side of the house, and panel doors to the rooms on the R. The first-floor landing has similar arches leading to the main rooms. Originally 2 rooms deep, in the lower storey the 2 original rooms on the R side of the house are now amalgamated into a single room, but 2 marble fireplaces with classical detail are retained. The first-floor rooms on the R side the house are similar, but the front room has a richer fireplace. Another marble fireplace is in the front L room in the upper storey, but its lintel is missing.  

Reason for designation
Listed for architectural interest as the finest of the surviving villas built in Tredegarville in the 3rd quarter of the C19, retaining high-quality detail in a striking overall design.  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





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